
When will unionists in Northern Ireland accept that unity with the Republic can’t simply be wished away?
In the wake of a bumper set of local election results for Sinn Fein, it’s clearer than ever that politics in Northern Ireland is a fool’s game.
In the wake of a bumper set of local election results for Sinn Fein, it’s clearer than ever that politics in Northern Ireland is a fool’s game.
The rift in Northern Ireland is threatening peace, and the UK’s transatlantic alliance.
Fresh data suggests reunification of Ireland looks to be further away than its proponents would like us to believe.
The Monarch’s six-hour stopover in Northern Ireland went better than anyone predicted, and may just have changed the political dynamic at Stormont.
The visit was a sensitive one, considering the Monarchy’s fraught history with Irish Republicanism.
The majority of Northern Irish Tory members are expected to vote for Truss, hoping that, unlike the outgoing PM, she might actually keep faith with Ulster and prove true to her word.
After the PM’s lightning tour of Northern Ireland and the foreign secretary’s threat in the Commons, a solution to the crisis appears as far away as ever.
With Liz Truss promising to scrap the Protocol, and Stormont at a standstill because of it, the fudge to get Brexit over the line is unravelling.
Four of Northern Ireland’s political parties (Sinn Fein, the equally nationalist but anti-violence SDLP, the Greens and the liberal Alliance) have sent a letter to
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